A graphic poster with the question, 'How do you know you belong?' written in bold pink text, with smaller black text at the top stating 'the year is 2325' and 'neurodiversity is normal', and social media handle '@neurodiversefutureism' at the bottom right corner.

It's 2325. The collapse happened. We built back better.

Neuro/diverse Futurism is a podcast that uses speculative imagination to redesign the future — for the brains and bodies that dominant culture has never designed for.

WHAT THIS IS

We host intimate, imaginative conversations where guests collaboratively imagine a future built differently. This isn't a debate show. It's a design process filled with complexity, contradictions and collaboration. It's slow, it's spacious, and it's allowed to be tender.

THE FORMAT

This show is quietly subversive, not loudly political. We're not looking for manifestos. We're looking for people who want to figure out how we all become “future neighbours”.

For each season, guests have a longer 1:1 conversation with the host to dive deeply into a topic and their unique take on it. For the season finale, all guests come together and reimagine a future world that could hold the nuances and complexity of competing needs and perspectives without the conflict and contradictions that exist when those emerge today.

WHO WE'RE LOOKING FOR

You might be a good fit if you identify as neurodiverse and you've ever wanted to think deeply about topics like:

  • How to find a balance between individual needs and collective needs

  • What institutions could look like if they were built around nervous systems, not compliance

  • How mutual aid and "no-shame need-sharing" could replace the competition economy

  • What belonging looks like when it's assumed, not earned

  • How centering the most vulnerable could actually make life better for everyone

  • What "progress" should actually mean

You don't need to be a futurist, an academic, or an expert. You need to have opinions about the world and a willingness to imagine it differently with others.

INSPIRED BY

Indigenous futurism. Afro-futurism. Collective liberation shouldn’t be a separate goal for neurodiverse people — it's the same goal.

READY TO IMAGINE?